Capacitors with recessed rivets allow smaller implantable defibrillators

ABSTRACT

Implantable defibrillators are implanted into the chests of patients prone to suffering ventricular fibrillation, a potentially fatal heart condition. Critical components in these devices are aluminum electrolytic capacitors, which store and deliver one or more life-saving bursts of electric charge to a fibrillating heart. These capacitors make up about one third the total size of the defibrillators. Unfortunately, manufacturers of these capacitors have paid little or no attention to reducing the size of these capacitors through improved capacitor packaging. Accordingly, the inventors devised a unique capacitor lid, or header, assembly that allows size reduction. Specifically, one embodiment of the header assembly includes two recesses, each with a depth that allows the head of a rivet (or other fastener) to be substantially flush, or coplanar, with the underside of the header. Another embodiment includes a single recess to receive two rivet heads. The recesses reduce the vertical space necessary to ensure separation of the rivets from internal components of the capacitor and thus allow reduction in the overall height of the capacitor and size of devices, such as implantable defibrillators, that use them.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/465,095, filed on Dec. 16, 1999, the specification of which is incorporated herein by reference now abandoned.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The present invention concerns capacitors, particularly those for use in medical devices, such as implantable defibrillators.

Every year more than half a million people in the United States suffer from heart attacks, more precisely cardiac arrests. Many of these cardiac arrests stem from the heart chaotically twitching, or fibrillating, and thus failing to rhythmically expand and contract as necessary to pump blood. Fibrillation can cause complete loss of cardiac function and death within minutes. To restore normal heart contraction and expansion, paramedics and other medical workers use a device, called a defibrillator, to electrically shock a fibrillating heart.

Since the early 1980s, thousands of patients prone to fibrillation episodes have had miniature defibrillators implanted in their bodies, typically in the left breast region above the heart. These implantable defibrillators detect onset of fibrillation and automatically shock the heart, restoring normal heart function without human intervention. The typical implantable defibrillator includes a set of electrical leads, which extend from a sealed housing into the heart of a patient after implantation. Within the housing are a battery for supplying power, heart-monitoring circuitry for detecting fibrillation, and a capacitor for storing and delivering a burst of electric charge through the leads to the heart.

The capacitor is typically an aluminum electrolytic capacitor. This type of capacitor usually includes stacked strips of aluminum foil and paper rolled up to form a cylindrical structure called an active element. The active element is typically placed in a round tubular can which is sealed shut with a flat circular lid, known as a header. (The header usually consists of two thin bonded layers, one rubber and the other phenolic resin.) Extending from the header are two terminals connected to the rolled up foils in the active element. The terminals are usually fastened to the lid using two rivets.

Each rivet has a short shank, or rod, with a broad head on one end. (The rivet head, typically round like the head of a nail, has a diameter of about four millimeters (three sixteenths of an inch) and a thickness of about one millimeter.) The shank extends through holes in the terminal and the header, with the head resting against the interior side of the header and its opposite end extending from the exterior side. The opposite end is flattened or otherwise deformed to prevent the shank from passing back through its hole, thereby fastening the terminal to the header.

In recent years, manufacturers of electrolytic capacitors have focused almost single-mindedly on improving the active element by developing aluminum foils, electrolytes, and multiple-anode arrangements that improve capacitor performance, specifically energy density—the amount of energy or charge a capacitor stores per unit volume. For example, because energy density is directly proportional to the surface area of the aluminum foil making up the active element, manufacturers have developed methods of etching microscopic hills and valleys into foil to increase its effective surface area.

In comparison, capacitor manufacturers have made little or no effort to reduce the size of capacitors through space-saving assembly techniques. For example, the inventors determined that the conventional use of rivets to fasten terminals to the capacitor lid, or header, wastes space. Specifically, they determined that conventional capacitor manufacturers generally increase capacitor height (or reduce foil dimensions) to accommodate the heads of the rivets that fasten terminals to headers. The rivet heads are electrically conductive and must be prevented from touching, or contacting, the foils in the active element. So, capacitor manufacturers increase the height of the case to provide clearance between the rivet heads and the foils. Unfortunately, this increases not only the size of the capacitors, but also the size of devices, such as implantable defibrillators, that incorporate them.

Accordingly, the inventors identified an unmet need to reduce the size of electrolytic capacitors, especially those intended for implantable defibrillators, through better techniques and structures for fastening terminals to capacitor headers.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

To address this and other needs, the inventors devised a capacitor having a header which includes one or more recesses. The recess receives the head of a rivet or other fastener and thus reduces or eliminates the need to increase capacitor height or reduce foil dimensions to achieve clearance between the fasteners and other capacitor parts, such as active-element foils. More particularly, the exemplary embodiment includes a header having two recesses, each with a depth that allows the head of a rivet to be substantially flush, or coplanar, with the underside of the header. In another embodiment, the header has a single recess to receive two rivet heads.

In devising this improvement, the inventors departed from at least two conventional capacitor design objectives: reducing the number of assembly steps per capacitor and reducing manufacturing waste or cost. Conventional capacitor manufacturers make hundreds of thousands or even millions of capacitors every year and are thus continually seeking ways to reduce capacitor assembly time. Indeed, saving (that is, omitting or skipping) even one manufacturing step amounts to considerable time and cost savings when multiplied by hundreds of thousands or millions of capacitors. Conversely, adding a step, such as forming one or more recesses in a header, to the manufacture of each capacitor generally increases assembly time and cost.

Similarly, conventional capacitor manufacturers who make thousands or millions of capacitors may also be concerned about reducing material waste, particularly seeking and developing capacitor designs and assembly practices which minimize or reduce the risk of destroying an entire capacitor or capacitor part during manufacture. Indeed, designs and manufacturing steps which pose a high risk of destroying an entire capacitor or capacitor part, such as a header, are generally avoided. Conventional headers are only about 2.5 millimeters thick and comprise two bonded layers of material. Forming one or more recesses in this type header not only adds a step to the manufacturing process, but also presents a risk of destroying it and thus increasing manufacturing waste and cost.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an exemplary cylindrical electrolytic capacitor 10 embodying the present invention.

FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of capacitor 10 in FIG. 1 taken along line 2—2 to show internal details of the capacitor, including an exemplary header assembly 14 having a recess 14 c which receives a rivet head 17 a.

FIG. 3 is a top perspective view of a header assembly 14 which comprises a recess 16 for the heads of rivets 15 a and 17 a.

FIG. 4 is a bottom prospective view of header assembly 14, showing rivet heads 15 b and 17 b within a recess 14 c.

FIG. 5 is a prospective view of an alternative embodiment of header assembly 14, which provides two recesses 14 c for rivet heads 15 b and 17 b.

FIG. 6 is a block diagram of an implantable defibrillator 30 which includes one or more electrolytic capacitors 36 a in accord with the invention.

DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

The following detailed description, which references and incorporates FIGS. 1-6, describes and illustrates one or more specific embodiments of the invention. These embodiments, offered not to limit but only to exemplify and teach, are shown and described in sufficient detail to enable those skilled in the art to implement or practice the invention. Thus, where appropriate to avoid obscuring the invention, the description may omit certain information known to those of skill in the art.

FIG. 1 shows a perspective view of an exemplary electrolytic capacitor 10 which incorporates a space-saving header assembly according to the present invention. Capacitor 10, which has a height 10 h and a diameter 10 d, includes a cylindrical aluminum case, a header (or lid) assembly 14, and two electrically conductive terminals 16 and 18. (Height 10 h is measured along a longitudinal axis.) Two aluminum rivets 15 and 17 respectively fasten terminals 16 and 18, which for example comprise solid aluminum or steel with a solder plate, to header assembly 14. Rivets 15 and 17 include respective upper heads 15 a and 17 a, and respective lower heads 15 b and 17 b, which are joined via respective intermediate rods, or shanks, 15 c and 17 c. (Lower heads 15 b and 17 b and shank 15 c and 17 c are visible in this perspective view. With the exception of shank 15 c, which is not visible in any of the Figures, shank 17 c and heads 15 b and 17 b are shown respectively in FIG. 2 and in FIGS. 4 and 5.) Other embodiments of the invention substitute other types of fasteners, for example, screws or bolts, for rivet 15 or 17. Thus, the present invention is not limited to any particular fastener.

Aluminum case 12 includes a circumferential seating groove 12 a and a rolled lip 12 b which secure header assembly 14 within an otherwise open end of case 12. (In this exemplary embodiment, an aluminum plate fused or formed integrally with case 12 closes the opposite end, or bottom of case 12. However, in other embodiments it could be advantageous to close the bottom end with a second header assembly.) Seating groove 12 a has an exemplary radius of about 0.035 inches. Lip 12 b, which can be formed by rolling over the top edge of case 12, has an exemplary radius of about 0.015 inches. FIG. 2 also shows that seating groove 12 a is a distance 12 d, for example 0.145 inches, from rolled lip 12 b.

FIG. 2, a cross-section taken along line 2—2 in FIG. 1, generally shows that case 12, which has a thickness 12 t, houses an active element 20. Active element 20 conventionally comprises a rolled assembly of an anode foil, a cathode foil, and at least one insulative separator, with each foil connected respectively to one of lower rivet heads 15 b and 17 b via an aluminum foil tab, such as tab 25. Lower rivet heads 15 b and 17 b, in the exemplary embodiment, are ultrasonically welded to a respective aluminum foil tab, with the ultrasonics applied in a shear direction relative the tab and the rivet head. An exemplary technique uses a 40 Megahertz Ultrasonic Welder from Amtech Corporation with the following operating criteria:

Energy: 11-18 Joules Clamp Force: 13-18 pounds per square inch Pressure: 18-28 pounds per square inch Amplitude: 11-12 micrometers Time Limit: 0.15-0.50 seconds Power: 55-110 watts.

However, other embodiments use different welders with different operating criteria.

FIG. 2 also shows that header assembly 14 comprises two bonded layers 14 a and 14 b, which provide a total header thickness 14 t between upper and lower planar surfaces 14 u and 14 l. In the exemplary embodiment, header thickness 14 t is about 2.5 millimeters, with layers 14 a and 14 b each being about 1.25 millimeters thick. Layer 14 a consists of rubber and layer 14 b consists of a phenolic resin. However, in other embodiments, header assembly 14 comprises three or more layers with a lesser or greater total thickness or one layer with an equal, lesser, or greater total thickness. Additionally, other embodiments form header assembly 14 from other materials: for example, thermoplastics, epoxies, and inert polymers using suitable molding technologies. Thus, header assembly 14 is not limited to any particular layered structure, dimensional selection, or composition.

Header assembly 14 also includes at least one recess 14 c, which has a recess depth 14 d less than the thickness of layer 14 b in the exemplary embodiment, but more generally less than header thickness 14 t. Recess 14 c receives lower rivet head 17 b, thereby reducing or preventing its extension below lower planar surface 14 l. Recess depth 14 d, in the exemplary embodiment, leaves the lower-most surface of lower rivet head 17 b (or more generally fastener head 17 b) lower than lower surface 14 l of header assembly 14. However, in other embodiments of the invention, recess depth 14 d allows the lower-most surface or portion of head 17 b to be substantially flush, or coplanar, with lower surface 14 l. Moreover, in yet other embodiments, recess depth 14 d allows the lower-most surface or portion of head 17 b to be above lower surface 14 l. Thus, the invention is not limited to any particular recess depth 14 d or recess profile. Likewise, the peripheral shape and size of recess 14 c, though not visible in this view, are theoretically unlimited.

FIGS. 3, 4, and 5 are perspective views, showing further aspects of header assembly 14 not clearly evident in FIGS. 1 and 2. In particular, FIG. 3 is a top perspective view of assembly 14, showing layers 14 a and 14 b, terminals 16 and 18, and upper rivet heads 15 a and 17 a. FIG. 4, a bottom perspective view of header assembly 14 based on FIG. 3, shows that layer 14 b includes a single recess 14 c which receives both of lower rivet heads 15 b and 17 b. FIG. 5, another bottom perspective view of assembly 14, shows two recesses 14 c: one which receives lower rivet head 15 b and another which receives lower rivet head 17 b. Thus, a header assembly in accord with the present invention includes one or more recesses of any desirable shape and depth or combination of shapes and depths.

EXEMPLARY IMPLANTABLE DEFIBRILLATOR

FIG. 6 shows one of the many applications for space-saving electrolytic capacitor 10: a generic implantable defibrillator 30. Defibrillator 30 includes a lead system 32, which after implantation electrically contact strategic portions of a patient's heart, a monitoring circuit 34 for monitoring heart activity through one or more of the leads of lead system 32, and a therapy circuit 36 which incorporates one or more capacitors 36 a similar to capacitor 10. Defibrillator 30 operates according to well known and understood principles.

In addition to implantable defibrillators and other cardiac rhythm management devices, such as pacemakers, the innovations of capacitor 10 can be incorporated into photographic flash equipment. Indeed, these innovations are pertinent to any application where small, high energy, low equivalent-series-resistance (ERS) capacitors are desirable.

CONCLUSION

In furtherance of the art, the inventors have devised a unique space-saving header for capacitors, particularly those for use in implantable defibrillators. In particular, the space-saving header includes at least one recess for mounting the head of a rivet flush (or more nearly flush) with the undersurface of the header, thereby allowing reduction in the height or volume of the capacitor and/or increases in the dimensions of other components, such as aluminum foils.

The embodiments described above are intended only to illustrate and teach one or more ways of practicing or implementing the present invention, not to restrict its breadth or scope. The actual scope of the invention, which embraces all ways of practicing or implementing the teachings of the invention, is defined only by the following claims and their equivalents. 

What is claimed is:
 1. An implantable heart rhythm management device comprising: one or more leads for sensing electrical signals of a patient or for applying electrical energy to the patient; a monitoring circuit for monitoring heart activity of the patient through one or more of the leads; and a therapy circuit for delivering electrical energy through one or more of the leads to a heart of the patient, wherein the therapy circuit includes one or more aluminum electrolytic capacitors, each comprising: one or more terminals; a header having a header thickness and one or more recesses, with each recess having a depth less than the header thickness; one or more aluminum fasteners, with each fastener fastening one of the terminals to the header and having a head at least partially within one of the recesses; and an active element including one or more aluminum foils, with at least one of the foils electrically coupled to one of the aluminum fasteners.
 2. The implantable heart rhythm management device of claim 1, wherein the header comprises first and second bonded layers, with the second bonded layer having a second thickness and with each recess having a depth less than the second thickness.
 3. The implantable heart rhythm management device of claim 1, wherein the header comprises first and second bonded layers, with the first layer consisting essentially of rubber and the second layer consisting essentially of phenolic resin.
 4. The implantable heart rhythm management device of claim 1, wherein the device is a defibrillator; one or more of the aluminum fasteners is a rivet; the active element includes one or more tabs coupled to one or more of the aluminum foils; and the rivet is ultrasonically welded to at least one of the tabs.
 5. The implantable heart rhythm management device of claim 1, wherein each recess has a depth less than on e half the header thickness.
 6. The implantable heart rhythm management device of claim 1, wherein each recess faces the active element.
 7. An implantable heart rhythm management device comprising: one or more capacitors, with each capacitor comprising: a tubular housing having a longitudinal axis and having an opening defining a plane intersecting the longitudinal axis; a header filling or covering at least a portion of the opening, having a maximum thickness in a dimension parallel to the longitudinal axis, and having one or more recesses, each with a depth, measured in the dimension parallel to the longitudinal axis, which is less than the maximum thickness of the header; and one or more terminals fastened to the header with one or one or more fasteners, each fastener having a head at least partly within one of the recesses.
 8. The implantable heart rhythm management device of claim 7, wherein each recess has a depth less than one half the header thickness.
 9. The implantable heart rhythm management device of claim 7, wherein each capacitor further comprises an active element within the tubular housing and wherein each recess faces the active element.
 10. The implantable heart rhythm management device of claim 7, wherein the housing and terminals consist essentially of aluminum.
 11. An implantable heart rhythm management device comprising: one or more capacitors, with each capacitor comprising: a tubular housing having a longitudinal axis and having a closed end and an open end, each defining a plane intersecting the longitudinal axis; a header filling or covering at least a portion of the opening, having a maximum thickness in a dimension parallel to the longitudinal axis of the housing, and having one or more recesses, each with a depth, measured in the dimension parallel to the longitudinal axis, which is less than the maximum thickness of the header; an active element within the tubular housing between the closed end and the header, the active element including one or more conductive members; and one or more terminals fastened to the header with one or more conductive fasteners, each fastener having a head electrically coupled to one or more of the conducive members and at least partly within one of the recesses.
 12. The implantable heart rhythm management device of claim 11, wherein each recess has a depth less than one half the maximum thickness of the header.
 13. The implantable heart rhythm management device of claim 11, wherein each recess faces the active element.
 14. An implantable heart rhythm management device comprising: one or more capacitors, with each capacitor including: capacitor casing means which defines an interior volume of the capacitor; header means having a header thickness attached to the capacitor casing means and having one or more each recess having a depth less than the header thickness; and terminating means fastened to the header with one or more fasteners, each fastener having a head at least partly within one of the one or more recesses. 